Central American Parliament, Victim or Villain?

By Néfer Muñoz, IPS,11 July 2000

SAN JOSE, Jul 11 (IPS) - The Central American Parliament
(Parlacen) has come under fire for devouring 20 million dollars a
year while coming up with few, and non-binding, results, and for
providing immunity from prosecution for politicians accused of
corruption.

The regional body is facing one of its worst crises since its
creation in 1991, caught up in a debate on one side of which are
lined up those who would like to see it completely dismantled, and
on the other those who argue that it should be salvaged, but
overhauled.

Critics charge that the Guatemala-based regional forum has
turned into a huge bureaucratic apparatus with no power, because
its resolutions are non-binding.

Other analysts say it has failed in its mission to integrate
the region, since Costa Rica decided not to take part on the
argument that it spent a lot and provided few results.

"Parlacen has been the victim of a lack of political will on
the part of governments in the region, which have lacked a clear
vocation for integration," Luis Guillermo Sol¡s, with the non-
governmental Foundation for Peace and Democracy (FUNPADEM), told
IPS.

Sol¡s said many of the lawmakers sitting on the regional
parliament were important legislators in their own countries, but
failed to push through laws and reforms aimed at strengthening the
regional integration process in Parlacen.

Parlacen, one of Central America's main regional bodies, is
comprised of 20 lawmakers from each of the member countries:
Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama and the
Dominican Republic, as well as Taiwan, an observer nation.

Sol¡s argued that Parlacen was necessary, but that Central
America's leaders should first determine what kind of integration
they want, in order to clearly define the functions of the
regional parliament.

In late June, Guatemalan President Alfonso Portillo suggested
that Parlacen should be dismantled due to its "ineffectiveness
and high cost."

Those who agree with Portillo say the regional parliament,
which has an annual budget of 20 million dollars, is a heavy
burden for Central America's flagging economies.

Analysts also contend that it has become a refuge for
politicians involved in corruption scandals, providing immunity
from prosecution for many former presidents and vice-presidents,
who become ex officio members of Parlacen once they finish their
terms.

Several proposals to salvage and reform Parlacen have recently
been set forth. Costa Rican foreign minister Roberto Rojas
proposed that the body become a "parliament of parliaments" --
in other words, that it consist of lawmakers already serving in
the national legislatures of member countries.

Rojas said that would ensure that the legislators would meet
only periodically, which would cut costs.

Another initiative came from former Honduran president Jos
Azcona, the current president of the political commission of
Parlacen, who urged the member governments to approve the Fourth
Protocol on Integration, in order to make the regional
parliament's decisions binding and enforceable.

Honduran analyst Jorge Ram¢n Hern ndez-Alcerro told IPS that
the controversy was one more reflection of the crisis plaguing the
System of Central American Integration (SICA), many of whose
institutions have failed to measure up in the 30 years since the
regional integration process got underway.

Critics of the region's system of integration charge that the
hurdles and lack of coordination -- not only facing Parlacen but
other regional institutions as well -- are a consequence of the
lack of a political force heading integrationist efforts.

Countries outside the region have warned against the idea of
dismantling the regional parliament, which they say would send a
"bad signal for democracy" in the eyes of Europe and donors in
other regions.

"I believe that whatever decision is adopted, whether that
Parlacen be maintained or that it be replaced by another
mechanism, must take into account the need for those who assume
those functions to be granted rights and authority," Dieter
Konig, the head of the European Union delegation to Costa Rica,
told IPS.

Konig said Parlacen has failed to function because the member
governments have not given it the power to enforce its decisions,
and "no congress in the world exists if it lacks clearly defined
rights" and authority.

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